This lesson contains 20 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 3 videos.
Items in this lesson
1960s America
Slide 1 - Slide
Literature
- To kill a Mockingbird written in 1960 takes places in 1935
- The Help written in 2009 takes place in 1962
Both works focus on and deal with themes and issues (ex. racism and poverty) that were striking for these periods in American history.
Slide 2 - Slide
We will focus on the 1960s but what do you know about the American 1930s?
Slide 3 - Open question
The Great Depression
- 5 million people lost their jobs
- After the crash of wallstreet
- Dust Bowl
Slide 4 - Slide
Hoovervilles
The Dust Bowl
Slide 5 - Slide
1960s America
Slide 6 - Mind map
Slide 7 - Video
05:18
Explain what segregation is in your own words.
Slide 8 - Open question
06:09
What is the NAACP?
A
National Anthropologists Against Civil Protest
B
Natural Aggressors of Anti Coloured Personnel
C
National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People
D
Neutral Anthropology Accepted by Certain Persons
Slide 9 - Quiz
07:28
Is this document pro or con the segregation of schools?
A
Pro
B
Con
Slide 10 - Quiz
10:52
What is the main point this video wants to make clear?
Slide 11 - Open question
Slide 12 - Video
02:05
Which of these novels takes place in Mississippi?
A
To kill a Mockingbird
B
The Help
Slide 13 - Quiz
03:52
Why did Kennedy have to support the Civil Rights Movement?
Slide 14 - Open question
05:40
"never go to war with a noun". What is this referring to?
Slide 15 - Open question
I Have a Dream
- Important historical moment
- Background information
- Listening as well as reading exercise
- Will help you understand and read difficult and older texts.
- Read along with the speech
Slide 16 - Slide
Slide 17 - Video
What is the main message of this speech? Take a few minutes
Slide 18 - Open question
1. Figurative language (From Prentice Hall Literature: Bronze, 1991): “writing or speech that is not meant to be taken literally. The many types of figurative language are known as figures of speech, which include (among others) metaphor, personification, simile and symbol.”
a. Metaphor: Something in a literary work described as though it were something else. “The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune.”
b. Personification: When a non-human subject is given human characteristics. The wind ate through the boy’s flesh.
c. Simile: A figure of speech that makes a direct comparison between two unlike subjects using either like or as. She sings as a lark sings but stings like a wasp.
d. Symbol: Anything in literature that stands for or represents something else. The sun symbolizing hope; night symbolizing fear; the tides symbolizing change.
2. Oratory (From Merriam Webster’s Encyclopedia of Literature, 1995): “the rationale and practice of persuasive public speaking.” Some oratorical devices include:
a. Refrain: A regularly repeated line or group of lines in a poem or song
b. Dramatic pause: An intentional pause in delivery in order to build suspense or magnify the importance of a point.
c. Hyperbole: exaggeration used for emphasis or dramatic effect. We will not breathe again until the injustice has stopped.